scholarly journals Relative Effectiveness of Letrozole Compared With Tamoxifen for Patients With Lobular Carcinoma in the BIG 1-98 Trial

2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (25) ◽  
pp. 2772-2779 ◽  
Author(s):  
Otto Metzger Filho ◽  
Anita Giobbie-Hurder ◽  
Elizabeth Mallon ◽  
Barry Gusterson ◽  
Giuseppe Viale ◽  
...  

Purpose To evaluate the relative effectiveness of letrozole compared with tamoxifen for patients with invasive ductal or lobular carcinoma. Patients and Methods Patients diagnosed with early-stage invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) or classic invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) who were randomly assigned onto the Breast International Group (BIG) 1-98 trial and who had centrally reviewed pathology data were included (N = 2,923). HER2-negative IDC and ILC were additionally classified as hormone receptor–positive with high (luminal B [LB] –like) or low (luminal A [LA] –like) proliferative activity by Ki-67 labeling index. Survival analyses were performed with weighted Cox models that used inverse probability of censoring weighted modeling. Results The median follow-up time was 8.1 years. In multivariable models for disease-free survival (DFS), significant interactions between treatment and histology (ILC or IDC; P = .006) and treatment and subgroup (LB like or LA like; P = .01) were observed. In the ILC subset, there was a 66% reduction in the hazard of a DFS event with letrozole for LB (hazard ratio [HR], 0.34; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.55) and a 50% reduction for LA subtypes (HR, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.32 to 0.78). In the IDC subset, there was a significant 35% reduction in the hazard of a DFS event with letrozole for the LB subtype (HR, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.53 to 0.79), but no difference between treatments was noted for IDC and the LA subtype (HR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.76 to 1.20). Conclusion The magnitude of benefit of adjuvant letrozole is greater for patients diagnosed with lobular carcinoma versus ductal carcinoma.

2016 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 181-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
L A Naleskina ◽  
N Yu Lukianova ◽  
S O Sobchenko ◽  
D M Storchai ◽  
V F Chekhun

Aim: To determine the patterns of lactoferrin (LF) expression in breast cancer (BC) in relation to biologic properties of the neoplasms and clinical features of the disease course. Materials and Methods: Clinical specimens of 266 BC patients (115 patients with BC of stages I–II — retrospective study, and 151 BC patients — prospective study) were analyzed. Morphological, immunohistochemical and statistical methods were used. Results: The number of LF-positive tumors in retrospective and prospective groups was similar (52.1 and 52.8%, respectively). Among common clinical criteria for prognosis of the disease outcome in BC patients (patient’s age; stage of the disease; histological type, differentiation grade, receptor status; presence of metastases), a strong correlation was found only between expression indexes of LF and estrogen receptors (ER). In ER-positive tumors expression of LF was significantly higher than in ER-negative tumors (35 vs 18%). 5-Year survival rate of BC patients was higher in LF-positive group (70 vs 52% in LF-negative group). The presence of regional metastasis tended to correlate with an increased number of LF-positive tumors. In the patients with invasive ductal carcinoma, expression level of LF moderately correlated with occurrence of luminal A subtype (r = 0.43), while in the patients with invasive lobular carcinoma this index strongly correlated with occurrence of luminal B subtype (r = 0.71). LF expression correlated positively with low and moderate differentiation grade of luminal B or basal tumors, and negatively with luminal B or basal tumors of high differentiation grade (r = −0.57 and −0.63, respectively). Conclusion: It has been shown that LF expression in breast tumors correlated with life expectancy of BC patients and important physiologic and clinical features of the disease, while the character of such relation strongly depended on molecular phenotype of tumor, i.e. luminal A, luminal B or basal.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e12586-e12586
Author(s):  
Davit Zohrabyan ◽  
Samvel Bardakhchyan ◽  
Sergo Mkhitaryan ◽  
Liana Safaryan ◽  
Jemma Arakelyan ◽  
...  

e12586 Background: Breast cancer (BC) is the most common malignancy among the women in Armenia (AM). Currently there is a knowledge gap regarding the morphology distribution of the BC in AM. Methods: The data on patients with BC diagnosed in 2015-2016 in the pathology lab “Davidyants Labs” in AM were retrospectively reviewed. Pts with Her2+ results by IHC were excluded from the study, due to unavailability to perform FISH or CISH analyses. Overall 361 pathology reports were evaluated. Results: The median age was 54 years; range [19-82]. Histopathological subtypes were defined for 305 pts, from which lobular carcinoma 57.4% of cases (175/305), ductal carcinoma 26.9% (82/305), mucinous carcinoma 2.6% (8/305), mixed type carcinoma (lobular and ductal) 2.6% (8/305), DCIS 2% (n = 6/305), non specified carcinoma 2% (6/305), medullary carcinoma 1% (n = 3/305) and others 5.6% (17/305). Within the cohort 8.5% (23/270) were grade 1, 65.9% grade 2 (178/270); 25.6% grade 3 (n = 69/270). Vascular or lymphatic invasion was present in 59.5% (50/84) and 64.7% (55/85), respectively. Staging distribution, based on pT pN data for 92 pts who went to primary surgery, was: 0 stage 7.6% (7/92), I stage 22.8% (21/92), II stage 41.3% (38/92), III stage 28.3% (26/92). Staging distribution based on ypT ypN data for 27 pts who went to surgery after neoadjuvant chemo was 0 stage 25.9% (7/27), I stage 18.5% (5/27), II stage 29.6% (8/27), III stage 25.9% (7/27). ER and PR were defined for 244 patients. ER positive 89.8% (219/244) of cases, PR pos. 73% (178/244), ER/PR pos. 72.5% (177/244) cases. Her receptor was defined for 237 patients. Her3+ 16.9% (40/237); Her2+ 12.7% (30/237); Her1+ 38% (90/237); Her0 32.5% (n = 77/237). We could not evaluate Her2+ status by FISH or CISH, so these results were excluded from the analysis. Ki67 was low (≤20) in 42.1% (101/240) of cases and high ( > 20) in 57.9% (139/240). Within the group Luminal A type was 41.4% (84/203); Luminal B 32.5% (66/203); Her positive 19.7% (40/203) and triple negative 6.4% (13/203). p53 and perineural invasion (Pn) was present in 32% (16/50) and 52% (26/50), respectively. Tumor leukocyte infiltration was determined for 16 patients. Leukocyte infiltration was positive in 43.7% (7/16) cases, negative in 25% (4/16) cases, minimal in 31.3% cases (5/16). Conclusions: BC in Armenian women presents with different epidemiological characteristics in comparison with other ethnicities. Lobular type BC is the most frequent type among Armenian women, however, differential diagnosis between lobular/ductal carcinomas was done without IHC (E-Cadherin), which rises the need for further studies on that regard.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 575-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel J. Gil Gil ◽  
Francisco Javier Perez ◽  
Teresa Soler Monso ◽  
Tomas Pascual ◽  
Patricia Galván ◽  
...  

575 Background: NET is gaining more acceptances for the management of hormonal receptors (HR)-positive breast cancer (BC). To date, the decrease of Ki-67 and PEPI score are the only prognostic factors associated with relapse-free survival after NET. PAM50 is a validated prognostic test in newly diagnosed BC; however, its value in residual tumors after NET is currently unknown. Methods: We took tumor tissues from patients of a retrospective study of 119 postmenopausal women with HR-positive stage II-III BC. Patients were diagnosed from 1997 to 2009 and were treated with NET for a median duration of 8.5 months . Median age was 74 (63-88). After NET all patients underwent surgery (73% conservative). Adjuvant treatment were endocrine therapy in 100%, radiotherapy in 76.5% and chemotherapy 7%. Median follow-up from surgery was 112 months. Median follow-up from surgery was 112 months. We observed 26 (24%) of distant relapses and 75 deaths (44 without cancer). Median overall survival was 134.8 months. RNA was extracted from FFPE tumor tissues of surgical specimens. A panel of 55 BC-related genes, including the research-based PAM50 assay (subtypes, ROR-S and ROR-P pre-defined cutpoints), androgen receptor (AR), immune genes (CD8A, CD4, PDL1 and PD1). Uni- and multi-variable Cox models were used to evaluate the association of each variable with distance recurrence free interval (DRFI). Results: PAM50 subtype distribution: Luminal A 54.3%, Normal-like 24.3%; HER2-enriched 16,5%, Luminal B 1% and basal 1%. Distribution of ROR-S groups was Low 64%, medium 30%and high 6%. Distribution of PEPI score was: 0 in 43%, 3 in 37% and 6 in 20%. Among the different variables explored, PEPI score 0 (HR 0.27 [95%IC 0.09-0.79] p=0.001), low ROR-S (HR 0.39 [95%CI 0.17-0.91] p=0.001) and high AR expression (HR 0.71 [95CI 0.53-0.96] p=0.007) were significantly associated with lower DRFI in univariate analyses. After adjusting for PEPI (with or without Normal-like tumors), ROR-S and AR remained significantly associated with outcome. Conclusions: PAM50 ROR-S and AR expression in residual tumors after NET provide independent prognostic information beyond PEPI. With further validation, these biomarkers could help clinicians in the decision-making of adjuvant chemotherapy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1032-1032
Author(s):  
Jennifer A. Ligibel ◽  
Constance Cirrincione ◽  
Minetta C. Liu ◽  
Marc L. Citron ◽  
James N. Ingle ◽  
...  

1032 Background: Obesity is a predictor of poor outcomes in women with early-stage breast cancer (BC). Some reports suggest that obesity is associated with aggressive tumor histology. We examined the relationship between BMI at diagnosis and PAM50 subtype, and explored the interaction between BMI and subtype on prognosis in early BC. Methods: CALGB 9741 evaluated dose-density and sequence in node-positive BC. All patients received doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide and paclitaxel dosed by actual body weight without cap or dose adjustment. The primary endpoint was RFS. Height and weight at diagnosis were abstracted from patient records; the PAM50 assay was performed using the Nanostring platform. Association between PAM50 and BMI was assessed by a chi-squared test. The prognostic value of BMI conditional on PAM50 was tested as a continuous variable using Cox models for RFS adjusted for number of involved nodes, tumor size, menopausal status, drug sequence, and dose density. Results: Baseline height and weight were available for 1909 of 2005 enrolled patients; 1272 also had subtype determination by PAM50. Distribution of subtypes differed significantly by BMI (p=0.03), with all weight groups having similar proportions of Basal and HER-2 Enriched subtypes and with obese patients having lower rates of Luminal A (30 vs 35%) and higher rates of Luminal B (39 vs 26%) tumors as compared to normal-weight individuals. In multivariate analyses, BMI and subtype were independent predictors of RFS (p=0.011 and p<0.001, respectively). Exploratory analyses did not show a significant interaction between subtype and the relationship between increased BMI and RFS (p=0.15), although largest differences were seen among Luminal cancers (Table). Conclusions: Biologic subtypes were distributed differently in obese and non-obese individuals. The association between BMI and RFS did not differ significantly by subtype in this study. More work is needed to further explore the interaction of BMI and subtype, especially in a larger cohort of Luminal tumors. [Table: see text]


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 4438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hye Min Kim ◽  
Ja Seung Koo

The clinical significance of immune cell subtypes in breast cancer remains poorly understood. To identify tumor-infiltrating immune cell subtypes in breast cancer and investigate their implications, tissue microarrays were constructed using 334 cases of invasive ductal carcinoma (luminal A type: 162 (48.5%), luminal B type: 96 (28.7%), HER-2 type: 21 (6.3%), and triple negative breast cancer: 55 (16.5%)). Hormone receptors (ER, PR, and HER-2), Ki-67, and immune cell subtype-related proteins (STAT4, STAT6, FOXP3, CD8, CD68, and CD163) were assessed immunohistochemically. The proportion of highly expressed STAT6, FOXP3, CD8, CD68, and CD163 proteins was found to be lowest in luminal A type but highest in the HER-2 type. Additionally, high-level STAT6, FOXP3, CD68, and CD163 protein expression was associated with higher histologic grade. ER negativity was associated with high STAT6, FOXP3, and CD163 expression levels, whereas PR negativity and high Ki-67 labeling index were associated with high CD163 expression. Univariate (p = 0.003) and multivariate Cox (hazard ratio: 2.435, 95% CI: 1.110-5.344, p = 0.049) analyses showed that high CD8 expression is an independent factor associated with shorter disease-free survival. Immune cell subtype-related protein expression is dependent on breast cancer molecular subtypes, and CD8 expression is associated with patient prognosis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 187-192
Author(s):  
E.A. Novikova ◽  
◽  
O.V. Kostromina ◽  
D.V. Mikhailov ◽  
S.L. Leontiev ◽  
...  

Aim. The aim of the study was to determine the presence of peculiarities of the age structure in patients with various surrogate molecular biological subtypes of breast cancer. Materials and research methods. This work analyzes the age-related characteristics of the occurrence of molecular biological subtypes in 499 patients with invasive breast cancer. All cases were divided into 5 molecular biological subtypes based on immunohistochemical studies of hormone receptors, Her2, Ki-67. The average age of the patients was 53.4±0.39 years, the predominant group was patients from 50 to 60 years (37.2% of the total). Research results. In patients under 40 years old, the triple negative subtype prevailed (44.8%). Luminal A subtype prevailed in the groups 51-60 years old (more than 41.4%) and over 60 years old (39.7%). Luminal B (Her2-) subtype was equally found in all age groups.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1685
Author(s):  
Antonino Grassadonia ◽  
Vincenzo Graziano ◽  
Laura Iezzi ◽  
Patrizia Vici ◽  
Maddalena Barba ◽  
...  

The neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR) is a promising predictive and prognostic factor in breast cancer. We investigated its ability to predict disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) in patients with luminal A- or luminal B-HER2-negative breast cancer who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT). Pre-treatment complete blood cell counts from 168 consecutive patients with luminal breast cancer were evaluated to assess NLR. The study population was stratified into NLRlow or NLRhigh according to a cut-off value established by receiving operator curve (ROC) analysis. Data on additional pre- and post-treatment clinical-pathological characteristics were also collected. Kaplan–Meier curves, log-rank tests, and Cox proportional hazards models were used for statistical analyses. Patients with pre-treatment NLRlow showed a significantly shorter DFS (HR: 6.97, 95% CI: 1.65–10.55, p = 0.002) and OS (HR: 7.79, 95% CI: 1.25–15.07, p = 0.021) compared to those with NLRhigh. Non-ductal histology, luminal B subtype, and post-treatment Ki67 ≥ 14% were also associated with worse DFS (p = 0.016, p = 0.002, and p = 0.001, respectively). In a multivariate analysis, luminal B subtype, post-treatment Ki67 ≥ 14%, and NLRlow remained independent prognostic factors for DFS, while only post-treatment Ki67 ≥ 14% and NLRlow affected OS. The present study provides evidence that pre-treatment NLRlow helps identify women at higher risk of recurrence and death among patients affected by luminal breast cancer treated with NACT.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e12570-e12570
Author(s):  
Lalnun Puii ◽  
Lalram Sangi ◽  
Hrishi Varayathu ◽  
Samuel Luke Koramati ◽  
Beulah Elsa Thomas ◽  
...  

e12570 Background: Gene expression profiling for breast cancer has classified ER positive subtype into luminal A and luminal B. Luminal B breast cancer (LBBC) have a higher proliferation and poorer prognosis than luminal A tumors. Ki-67 index is the commonly used proliferation marker in breast cancer; however Ki67 expression can also be used to identify a subset of patients among LB with a favorable prognosis. This study attempts to verify this subset of LBBC patients based on DFS and PFS in non-metastatic and metastatic patients respectively. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 80 IDC breast cancer patients diagnosed in 2013-2016 with complete follow-up till January-2021. We defined LBBC as ER+, PR+ or PR- , HER2+ or HER2- with a Ki67 index >20%. PFS was considered as the endpoint in patients presenting with metastatic disease whereas DFS was used in non-metastatic disease. The cut-off for ki67 was calculated using an X-tile plot (version 3.6.1, Yale University) by dividing Ki67 data into two populations: low and high, with randomized 1:1 “training” and “validation” cohorts. Results: Median age was 51.5 years. 18.7% (n=15) presented with metastasis at the time of diagnosis and their overall median PFS was found to be 25.8 months. The incidence of HER2 positive LBBC was found to be 15% (n=12) and none of them were found to be presented with metastasis. Survival and frequency of various sub groups in our study are enlisted in the given table. We estimated a Ki67 cut-off of 30% in patients with upfront metastatic disease and PFS was found to be higher in <30% compared to a Ki67 index >30% (38.9 months vs 19.7 months, p-0.002). Overall median DFS was not achieved in non-metastatic group (Mean DFS: 64.7 months) where as a statistically significant difference was observed in the survival of HER2 positive (median DFS: 53.5 months, mean DFS: 50.9) than HER2 negative patients (median DFS not achieved, mean: 66.97 months) ( p-0.021). We obtained a Ki67 cut-off of 32% in non- metastatic group and mean DFS was found to be higher in Ki67<32% (69 months) compared to Ki67>32% (61.4 months), however it failed to exhibit a statistically significant relationship ( p-0.373). Conclusions: Our study indicates that a subset of patients exists within metastatic and non-metastatic LBBC with differing prognosis based on Ki67. Larger studies are further required to confirm the findings and therapeutic implications.[Table: see text]


2010 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad A. Rakha ◽  
Andrew H.S. Lee ◽  
Andrew J. Evans ◽  
Sindhu Menon ◽  
Nancy Y. Assad ◽  
...  

Purpose Although tubular carcinoma (TC) is known to have a favorable prognosis, it is still unknown whether this subtype represents a distinct type of breast carcinoma or whether it behaves like other low-grade luminal A–type breast carcinomas. Methods In this study, we performed a retrospective analysis of a large well-characterized series of breast cancers (2,608 carcinomas) to assess the clinicopathologic and molecular features and prognostic value of TC compared with grade 1 ductal carcinomas of the breast. Results When compared with grade 1 ductal carcinoma (n = 212), TC (n = 102) was more likely to be detected on mammographic screening, had smaller median size, and less frequently showed lymphovascular invasion. Compared with grade 1 ductal carcinoma, TC was associated with longer disease-free survival (χ2 = 13.25, P < .001) and breast cancer–specific survival (χ2 = 8.8, P = .003). In this study, none of the patients with TC developed distant metastasis or died from the disease without an intervening recurrence as invasive carcinoma of different histologic type. Conclusion We conclude that the biologic behavior of TC is excellent and is more favorable than that of grade 1 ductal carcinoma. Patients with TC may be at risk of developing second primary carcinomas in the contralateral breast, which may be of higher grade and poorer potential prognostic outcome. In addition, patients with TC seem to have a close to normal life expectancy, and as a consequence, adjuvant systemic therapy may not be justified in their routine management.


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